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a thought track is when you pause and tell what your feeling in the audience.
A caesura is a pause within a line of poetry that can create emphasis or a moment of reflection. It is often marked by punctuation or by a natural break in the rhythm of the line.
They are innate behaviors that occur in a repeating pattern, such as Circadian rhythm.
Usually in patients with a pacemaker, it happens in the atrioventricular node.
In "The Canterbury Tales," by Geoffrey Chaucer, the line "Whan that Aprille with his shoures soote" contains a caesura after "Aprille." This pause creates a break in the rhythm and allows for emphasis on the subsequent words in the line.
A caesura is a pause or break in a line of poetry, typically occurring in the middle of a line. It is used to create rhythm, emphasize a point, or allow for a natural pause in the verse.
The best thing about reading Poetry aloud is that it is designed to be read out loud. This means that the poet, if they are any good, will have provided a natural rhythm for the poem to flow.Part of that rhythm is decided by punctuation. Punctuation is an indicator to you, the reader/speaker, of where to pause. Any commas, semicolons, colons, ellipses, hyphens, line breaks, new stanzas, etc. all indicate a pause. Some forms of punctuation carry more weight than others. For instance, I would pause less for a comma than I would for a semicolon. It's all about the emotion being conveyed at that time as well which helps determine pause length.Typically, a length of verse with much punctuation reflects a tone of heaviness (from sadness, fear, thought, etc.)--so slow down. Inversely, lack of punctuation is often used to show mania (anxiety, panic, excitement, etc.) which could be nicely read with increased pace.Hope this helps you!-ForensicsFriend
An em-dash (—) is commonly used to show a large pause or interruption in thought within a sentence. It can also be used to set off nonessential information or emphasize a point.
purkinjie fiber develops a rhythm of its own & ventricular contraction occur
Continuity of thought occurs when a person's ideas, reasoning, and thoughts flow seamlessly from one to the next without interruptions or disruptions. This can happen when someone is fully engaged in a topic or task, allowing them to maintain a coherent and logical progression of thoughts.
Thought and gone have the same vowel sound, and so would qualify as an assonance, if not a rhyme strictly speaking.
Most thought of sleep.